While the new Highlight and Shadow tool offers some great advantages, there may …still be times where you wish that you had access to the old tool. …Maybe it's simply a case of you being more used to the old tool and very …comfortable with it. Or perhaps you found an image that you …know you could correct with the old tool, but you can't quite get with the new one. …Well the good news is, the tool is actually still in Aperture 3.3 and above. …It's just hidden. All the old legacy tools have to still be there. …Otherwise, older images that you had previously adjusted and then opened in a …newer version of Aperture, wouldn't be able to render.…

So, the old code is still there. It's just a case of finding it. …There's two different ways that you can go about getting to it. …The first is to open up an old image in your library, that has the old Highlights …and Shadows tool already applied to it. This image here, for example, as you can …see has the Legacy Highlights and Shadows tool. …What I can do, is simply save this as a new effect, applying just the highlights …

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Released

1/13/2013

The changes to Apple Aperture between versions 3.0 and 3.3/3.4 have been significant, and in this workshop Joseph Linaschke shows you what's new. Learn about the interface changes, support for the new Retina-display Macs, fast camera preview browsing, naming convention changes, iPhoto library compatibility, new white balance and Highlights & Shadows tools, Auto Enhance, the new Shared Photo Stream feature, and more. Plus, get a guide to terminology changes and see why the upgrade from iPhoto to Aperture is easier than ever before.